People's Republic of China: Difference between revisions

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*[[File:Japan-icon.png]] [[Japan|日本]] - YUO FASCIST EMPEROR, YOUR ANIME SUCKS!!
*[[File:Japan-icon.png]] [[Japan|日本]] - YUO FASCIST EMPEROR, YOUR ANIME SUCKS!!


==琐事 (Trivia)
*250 (二百五) is a swear word in Chinese.


{{Communism}}
{{Communism}}

Revision as of 16:39, 19 October 2024

What can Emperor Qin Shi Huang brag about? He only killed 460 Confucian scholars, but we killed 46,000 intellectuals. There are people who accuse us of practicing dictatorship like Emperor Qin Shi Huang, and we admit to it all. It fits the reality. It is a pity that they did not give us enough credit, so we need to add to it.
Mao Zedong

The People’s Republic of China, more commonly known as China is a sadistic and communist country located in Asia. He likes to capture and torture dissidents, starve peasants and take away their crops, stealing money from the people and kill just about everyone, even his own party officials. He shows a total disregard for basic human rights.

The PRC systematically suppresses dissent through torture, indoctrination camps, and forced disappearances. He is notorious for his “re-education” campaigns, where citizens are brainwashed into blind loyalty and are made into killing tools of the regime or face dire consequences. His disregard for individual lives is infamous, willing to crush any opposition to maintain the Party’s reign, and stops at nothing. Public humiliation and beating, ripping babies apart, massacres, forced organ harvesting, the PRC has done it all. Throughout his history, PRC has killed 40-80 million Chinese people by democide.

A common misconception among most people is that China is the PRC. While China represents a divine land with 5000 years of rich culture, the PRC is the entity that destroyed it, slaughtered its people like animals, degenerated the morals of the people that is left, and proclaimed itself as such: “Without the Communist Party, there would be no China”.

历史 (History)

毛泽东时代 (Maoist Era)

After beating the Republic of China to Taiwan by exploiting their weakness after WWII (with the army that the CCP shamelessly expanded instead of fighting the Japan, the PRC was proclaimed. The dictator, Mao Zedong, promised the people freedoms of person, thought, speech, assembly publication, association, religion, and equal rights for women, rent reduction, land distribution, and much more, which were totally kept. The people were happy, but they could have never seen what horrors awaits them under Mao’s dictatorship.

The Land Reform Campaign was first, and the PRC labeled 20 million people living in rural areas as enemies of the common people, and these people lost all of their rights, and were beaten, humiliated, and killed. Many were driven to suicide. In the end, ten to twenty thousand of these landlords died due to this. The landless peasants got their land, but it would not last. PRC pushed the peasants towards Socialism, shaming on those who are not on board. Mao also killed a lot of other people, mostly ordinary people labeled and perceived as “ideological enemies” and critics of the Party across the 1950s, in his idiotic campaigns of “Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries”, “Three-Anti Campaign”, “Five-Anti Campaign”, and to add to that, Mao decided to start another, disastrous campaign: The Great Leap Forward.

On an unrelated note, the PRC invaded and annexed (as he calls it, “liberated”) the de-facto independent Tibet in 1950, resulting in a treaty that integrated Tibet into communist territory in 1951.


暴行 (Atrocities)

消除房东累 (Eliminating the Landlord Class)

Barely three months after the founding of communist China, the CCP called for the elimination of the landlord class, as one of the guidelines for his nationwide land reform program. The Party’s slogan “land to the tiller” indulged the selfish side of the landless peasants, encouraging them to struggle with the landowners by whatever means and to disregard the moral implications of their actions. The land reform campaign, starting in early 1950, explicitly stipulated eliminating the landlord class and classified the rural population into different social categories. By 1953, twenty million rural inhabitants nationwide were labeled landlords, rich peasants, reactionaries, or bad elements. These new outcasts faced discrimination, humiliation, and loss of all their civil rights.

As the land reform campaign spread into remote areas and ethnic minority villages, the CCP rapidly expanded its local branches. These branches passed on orders from the Party’s central committee and led peasants in class struggles against landlords. Around 100,000 landlords were killed (or driven to suicide), with some areas wiping out entire families, regardless of gender or age, to eliminate the landlord class. Meanwhile, the CCP promoted propaganda, portraying Chairman Mao as a savior and the Party as the only force capable of saving China. The PRC’s policy of reaping without laboring and robbing without concern for the means gave landless peasants what they wanted. Benefiting from the redistribution of land, they credited the PRC and accepted his propaganda.

For the owners of the newly acquired land, the good days of “land to the tiller” were short-lived. Within two years, the PRC imposed a number of practices on the farmers, such as mutual-aid groups, primary cooperatives, advanced cooperatives, and people’s communes. Using the slogan of criticizing “women with bound feet” — meaning those who are slow paced — the CCP drove and pushed, year after year, urging peasants to dash into socialism. With grain, cotton, and cooking oil placed under a unified procurement system nationwide, the major agricultural products were excluded from market exchange. In addition, the CCP established a residential registration system, barring peasants from going to the cities to find work or dwell. Those who were registered as rural residents were not allowed to buy grain at state-run stores, and their children were prohibited from receiving education in cities. Peasants’ children could only be peasants, turning the 360 million rural residents of the early 1950s into second-class citizens.

消灭资产阶级 (Eliminating the Capitalist Class)

Another class the PRC wants to eliminate during his Maoist era were the bourgeoisie, who owned capital in cities and rural towns. While reforming China’s industry and commerce, PRC told everyone that the capitalist class and the working class were different in nature: the former was the exploiting class while the latter was the class that did not exploit and opposed exploitation. According to this incorrect logic, the capitalist class was born to exploit and wouldn’t stop doing so until it perished; it could only be eliminated, not reformed.

The PRC used both killing and brainwashing to “transform” capitalists and merchants. If you surrendered your assets to the state and supported the PRC, you were considered just a minor problem among the people. If, on the other hand, you disagreed with or complained about the PRC’s policy, you would be labeled a reactionary and become target. During the reign of terror that ensued during these reforms, capitalists and business owners all surrendered their assets. Many of them couldn’t bear the humiliation they faced and committed suicide. Chen Yi (陈毅), then mayor of Shanghai, asked every day, “How many paratroopers did we have today?” — referring to the number of capitalists who had committed suicide by jumping from the tops of buildings that day. In only a few years, the PRC eliminated private ownership in China.

镇压宗教 (Crackdown on Religion)

PRC decided to committed another atrocity with his brutal suppression of religion and complete ban of all grass-roots religious groups, following the founding of the People’s Republic of China. In 1950, he instructed his local governments to ban all unofficial religious faiths and secret societies. He stated that those “ feudalistic” underground groups were mere tools in the hands of landlords, rich farmers, reactionaries, and special agents of the Kuomintang. In the nationwide crackdown, the government mobilized the classes they trusted to identify and persecute members of religious groups. Governments at various levels were directly involved in disbanding such “superstitious groups,” such as communities of Christians, Catholics, Taoists (especially believers of I-Kuan Tao), and Buddhists. They ordered all members of these churches, temples, and religious societies to register with government agencies and to repent for their involvement. Failure to do so would mean severe punishment. In 1951, the government formally promulgated regulations stating that those who continued their activities in unofficial religious groups would face a life sentence or the death penalty.

关系 (Relationship)

朋友 (Friends)

中心 (Neutral)

  • 印度 - I supported Pakistan against you during this war. But now we’re the big trading partner. ALSO HOW DARE YUO SURPASSING ME INTO HAVING THE BIGGEST POPULATION IN THE WORLD, I WAS CAN INTO THE BIGGEST POPULATION.

敌人 (Enemies)

  • 台湾 - YUO IS FAKE COUNTRY AND MY REAL PROVINCE/ISLAND!!!
  • 英国 - We both can into liking tea BUT PLEASE STOP BRAINWASHING HONG KONG!
  • 日本 - YUO FASCIST EMPEROR, YOUR ANIME SUCKS!!

==琐事 (Trivia)

  • 250 (二百五) is a swear word in Chinese.